Part 10 (1/2)

It was semi-twilight. He picked his way up and knocked gently.

So gently, Dil was sure of a customer for her mother. The babies were asleep. Bess was fixed in her wagon. Dil had some patches of bright colors that she was going to sew together, and make a new carriage rug.

She opened the door just a little way. He pushed it wider, and glanced in.

”Oh, have you forgotten me?” he exclaimed. ”Did you think I would not come?”

Dil stood in a strange, sweet, guilty abas.e.m.e.nt. She had disbelieved him. Bess gave a soft, thrilling cry of delight, and stretched out her hands.

”I knew you would come,” and there was a tremulous exaltation in her weak voice.

”I've only been in town a few days. I have been staying with a cousin who met with a sad accident and is still ill. But I have run away for an hour or two; and I have brought Bess's picture.”

He was taking a little survey of the room. The stove shone. The floor was clean. The white curtain made a light spot in the half gloom. The warmth felt grateful, coming out of the chilly air, though it was rather close. Dil did not look as well as on the summer day. Her eyes were heavy, with purple shadows underneath; the ”bang” of the morning had left some traces. And Bess was wasted to a still frailer wraith, if such a thing was possible.

They both looked up eagerly, as he untied the package, and slipped out of an envelope a delicately tinted photograph.

”There, blue eyes, will it do for Dil?”

The child gave a rapturous cry. Dil stood helpless from astonishment.

”There ain't no words good enough,” Dil said brokenly. ”Leastways, I don't know any. O Bess, he's made you look jes' 's if you was well. O mister, will she look that way in heaven?” For Dil had a vague misgiving she could never look that way on earth.

”She will be more beautiful, because she will never be ill again.”

”Dil's right-there ain't no words to praise it,” Bess said simply. ”If we was rich we'd give you hundreds and hundreds of dollars, wouldn't we, Dil?”

Dil nodded. Her eyes were full of tears. Something she had never known before struggled within her, and almost rent her soul.

”And here is your book. You can read, of course?”

”I can read some. Oh, how good you are to remember.” She was deeply conscience stricken.

The tone moved him immeasurably. His eyelids quivered. There were thousands of poor children in the world, some much worse off than these.

He could not minister to all of them, but he did wish he could put these two in a different home.

”I must go away again with my cousin, and I am sorry. I meant to”-what _could_ he do, he wondered-”to see more of you this winter; but a friend of mine will visit you, and bring you a little gift now and then. You must have spent all your money long ago,” flus.h.i.+ng at the thought of the paltry sum.

”We stretched it a good deal,” said Dil quaintly. ”You see, I bought Bess some clo'es, there didn't seem much comin' in for her. An' the fruit was so lovely. She's been so meachin'.”

”Well, I am going to be-did you ever read Cinderella?” he asked eagerly.

”I ain't had much time for readin', an' Bess couldn't go to school but such a little while.”

”And no one has told you the story?”

There was a curious eagerness in the sort of blank surprise.

”Well, this little Cinderella did kitchen work; and sat in the chimney-corner when her work was done, while her sisters dressed themselves up fine and went to parties. One evening a curious old woman came, a fairy G.o.dmother, and touched her with a wand, a queer little stick she always carried, and turned her old rags into silks and satins, and made a chariot for her, and sent her to the ball at the king's palace.”

”Oh,” interposed Dil breathlessly, ”she didn't have to come back to her rags, an' chimney, an' all, did she?”